Ex-Pixies frontman Frank Black went solo last Thursday at SOhO as Black Francis.
Paul Wellman

When Frank Black talks, you listen, dammit.

Yes, the former Pixies frontman squints when he sings – even when he’s performing under his old moniker, Black Francis – but that doesn’t mean the man can’t hear you chitchatting when he’s explaining his top-notch new rock opera album, Bluefinger. The new tracks stand as a tribute to the life of the late Dutch musician Herman Brood, and Black sang them with a vigor that let the SOhO crowd know that each one carried emotional weight for him. Possibly because some in attendance were unfamiliar with his newer work, people seemed uninterested by Black’s between-song anecdotes and chose instead to talk among themselves. That’s the danger of performing in a crowded bar, of course, but this reviewer couldn’t help wondering if some of those talking truly realized that they were ignoring Frank Fucking Black.

While his delivery of the new material made the show, Black wisely opened with older work, including a reinterpretation of The Pixie’s “Wave of Mutilation,” which nearly verged on spoken word, but won the audience over nonetheless. The performance was marred somewhat by two early interruptions – one to question a certain Independent photographer and another to rewrite lyrics he suddenly found objectionable – but once he blasted into Bluefinger‘s “Tight Black Rubber,” Black seemed to hit his stride. A true high point would have to have been “She Took All the Money,” which Black identified as being “not about Nina Hagen, but she loomed close by.” (Hagen was once linked romantically to Brood.)

If one had to fault Black and his bandmates at all, it certainly wouldn’t be for the adept musicianship of drummer Jason Carter or bassist Dan Schmid. The absence of backup vocalist Violet Clark, however, left some of the Bluefinger material lacking. Black himself bemoaned Clark’s absence (due to pregnancy) before “Angels Come to Comfort You.”

The show closed with more favorites, including the great “Motorway to Roswell,” which reminded everyone there why they loved Frank Black in the first place, and why it will no doubt be too long before he returns to town.

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